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Paris: Edouard Michelin, who steered into the 21st century the Michelin tire giant founded more than 100 years ago by his great-grandfather and his great-great uncle, was killed on Friday in a boating accident, the French company said. He was 42.
The world's leading tire maker said Michelin, its co-managing partner who had headed the group since 1999, was killed near Sein island off western France's Atlantic coast.
Michelin joined the company in 1985, nearly a century after it was founded in 1889 by the brothers Edouard and Andre Michelin.
As boss, he sparked anger by cutting jobs, oversaw Michelin's return to Formula One as well as its planned withdrawal from the sport this year, and brought a new degree of openness to the traditionally paternalistic and secretive company.
Following his death, Michelin said its other managing partner, Michel Rollier, would run the company that employs 130,000 people worldwide, 30,000 of them in France.
The company is also known for its famed restaurant guides, its maps, for inventing radial tires, and for its roly-poly Michelin Man logo, known as Bibendum.
Michelin had been aboard a fishing boat, "Le Liberte," that sank in still unexplained circumstances.
The boat left the Brittany port of Audierne on Thursday night. His body was recovered on Friday afternoon, authorities said.
There had been fog since Friday morning but otherwise conditions were described as excellent. Michelin's fishing companion, Guillaume Normant, was still missing.
Born in Clermont-Ferrand, central France, where the company is based, Michelin trained as an engineer and did his military service in the French Navy.
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At Michelin, he held various posts in research, production and sales. He was a factory production manager before becoming CEO of Michelin North America.
He became a managing partner in 1991, and was appointed Michelin's head on June 11, 1999.
The youngest of four sons, he took over from his father, Francois Michelin, becoming the fourth consecutive family member to run the company.
He quickly provoked outcry by announcing 7,500 job cuts - about 10 percent of Michelin's European workforce - despite higher profits. The then-Socialist government, unions and even Clermont-Ferrand's bishop were critical.
Michelin took the company back into Formula One in 2001, after a 17-year absence. ''It's going to be challenge and, at Michelin, we love challenges,'' he said.
But last December, after a fiasco at the US Grand Prix when all Michelin-shod teams sat out the race with concerns over tire safety, the company announced that it would depart F1 after the 2006 season, leaving Japanese builder Bridgestone as the sport's only tire supplier.
President Jacques Chirac hailed Michelin for modernizing the firm, ''making it a universally recognized French industrial champion.''
Chirac's Interior Minister and presidential hopeful Nicolas Sarkozy described Michelin, who was married with six children, as ''a brilliant, dynamic and deeply humane man.''
''He nurtured a passion for his company and knew how to share it,'' Sarkozy said. ''With his death, the French economy tragically loses one of its rising figures.''
Michelin reported a 36 per cent surge in net profit for 2005 despite sharply rising raw material costs and lower volume sales.
The company said on Friday evening that funeral arrangements were not yet fixed. It refused to release the names of his wife and children.
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